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KembaraXtra – Legal Terms – Offences Against International Law and Order
Offences against international law and order are crimes that threaten the proper functioning of the international community and international peace.
Certain offences are recognized internationally as so serious that states are obliged by treaty or customary international law to prosecute or punish them. Examples include *piracy, *hijacking, and *war crimes.
Some international offences impose liability directly on individuals, while others may create responsibility for states themselves. The International Law Commission has attempted to define international crimes through its Draft Articles on State Responsibility.
Examples of serious international wrongdoing include aggression, colonial domination by force, slavery, *genocide, apartheid, and severe environmental destruction.
These offences are regarded as matters of concern to the whole international community because they violate fundamental international norms and threaten global order and human rights.

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